Animal cells do contain DNA. The DNA is in the nucleus.
Yes they do. The standard double stranded helix of deoxyribonucleic acid.
DNA is heridatery material,
Circular DNA cannot be found in animal cells, only in prokariotic cells.
Yes they do, DNA is the blue print for life.
The Nucleus contains nearly all of the cell's DNA.
It is found on both.
DNA is heridatery material,
Circular DNA cannot be found in animal cells, only in prokariotic cells.
Yes they do, DNA is the blue print for life.
They are eukaryotic, meaning that the DNA is encased in a nucleus in the cell.
No, DNA is a molecule, a helical one. It is contained in all living cells. Even cells in animals living on the bottom of the ocean where there is no sun.
Mitochondria have their own DNA and provide energy in both plants and animals cells
An organelle called the nucleus is where DNA is found in plants and animals.
Well... Human beings are animals, so you cannot really compare human cells to animal cells. But it's just the difference of DNA sequencing among different animals
The Nucleus contains nearly all of the cell's DNA.
Cells are what keeps us alive. they hold our DNA and our DNA is what tells us apart. the cells are protected by the cell wall in plants and cell membrane in animals.
no and yes. you cant breed animals simply from dna collected from a saliva or hair sample. how ever and ovum (egg cell) and sperm cell without dna would not have a reaction. you need two sex cells from animals of opposite genders if the same species and the cells have to have undergone mitosis (you cant merely put dna from any part of the body into these cells and expect anything to work they need to go through a process which involves reconfiguration of the individuals dna chromosomes for the cells to be viable)
Both animals and plants have organelles called mitochondria. They also both have cells, RNA and DNA.